I’m arranging a series of one-hour classes that blend hardware design (VLSI and PCB) with software development in Python and Java. My students sit at an intermediate level in both languages, so each session must go beyond basics and dive straight into advanced concepts, hands-on coding practice, and a mini project component we can build on from week to week. On the hardware side, I’d like you to break down VLSI and PCB workflows in the same practical style—show the design flow, demonstrate essential simulation or testing steps, and connect theory to real-world use cases that spark curiosity. Key details • Format: live, one-hour interactive class (screen-share, white-board or live IDE). • Pace: concise explanations followed by immediate demos or coding walkthroughs. • Payment: I release 25 % of the agreed course total after each completed class. • Extras: brief takeaway notes or code snippets after every session help reinforce learning. If you’re equally comfortable discussing timing analysis in a VLSI block diagram and refactoring a Java project, let’s get started—I’m ready to lock in our first session.